Avery, power play spark Rangers past Flyers

Mar 15, 2009 - 8:49 PM

NEW YORK (Ticker) -- Sean Avery shook up the Philadelphia Flyers
with his grit and his gift of gab. And just when they had enough
of that, he beat them with his stick.

With a national TV spotlight on him, and a fired-up home crowd
adoring his every agitating move, Avery scored two power-play
goals and drew a pair of penalties to lead the New York Rangers
to a 4-1 victory over the Flyers on Sunday.

"He gets the puck, and five guys on their team want to kill
him," linemate Scott Gomez said.

Avery has scored in three straight games and has four goals in
that stretch. As it was during his first stint with the Rangers,
before he was banished by the Dallas Stars for crude public
comments, New York performs better with him in the lineup
(4-2-0).

"The first couple of games I was just so nervous, kind of
playing a little too hard," Avery said. "I'm just trying to slow
it down, think about the plays and where they're going to end
up.

"I feel good as far as just being happy that I'm out playing,
and trying to play hard and help the team win. I've gotten some
good bounces and I've gotten some good passes. It's tough to
explain. Obviously, the team playing better is something that
helps a lot."

Nik Antropov also scored a man-advantage goal for the Rangers,
who matched their season high with three power-play tallies on
nine chances and split a weekend home-and-home series with the
Flyers.

"They took way too many penalties to be able to win this game,
and our power play was outstanding," said Henrik Lundqvist, who
made 24 saves.

New York, which began the day eighth in the Eastern Conference,
moved within four points of fourth-place Philadelphia. The teams
have two meetings remaining.

Fredrik Sjostrom scored a wraparound goal at even strength to
make it 4-1, giving the Rangers their fifth win in nine games
(5-3-1) since John Tortorella replaced fired coach Tom Renney.

Tortorella's 244th NHL win moved him into a tie with Peter
Laviolette for the most victories by a U.S.-born coach.

Lundqvist earned his 31st win, allowing only Simon Gagne's
power-play goal in the second. He was already the first goalie
to post 30 victories in each of his first four NHL seasons.

Avery staked the Rangers to a 1-0 lead in the first period and
added his second in the third while New York enjoyed a 5-minute
power play.

Flyers defenseman Braydon Coburn was ejected in the closing
seconds of the middle period after hitting Antropov in the head
with his stick near center ice, drawing a match penalty. New
York scored only once on the advantage, but coupled with Andrew
Alberts' charging infraction on Avery, Philadelphia was
short-handed for the first 7 minutes of the third.

"It was retaliation," Coburn said. "I was kind of protecting
myself. I thought he was going to come at me again."

Avery has four goals in seven games since rejoining New York,
topping the three he had in 27 games earlier this season with
Dallas. He got under the skin of Flyers forward Jeff Carter, who
was called for hooking him in the first period.

"His probation period is over and now he's back to his old
antics and we got sucked in," Flyers coach John Stevens said.
"He obviously had a game plan. Give him credit. That's what he
does best."

One day after Martin Biron made 39 saves in beating the Rangers,
he gave way to backup Antero Niittymaki, who stopped 35 shots.

"It's an emotional game every time we play the Rangers," Coburn
said. "We were trying to match their intensity and they were
trying to match ours."

Antropov gave New York its second one-goal lead 8:27 into the
middle period when he snapped a shot in off the post from the
right circle.

New York grabbed a 1-0 edge in the first period for the second
straight game. Avery got his stick blade on Derek Morris' shot
in front and tipped the puck under the crossbar, popping up the
water bottle with 2 minutes left. He went into his trademark
arm-pumping glide in celebration.

"He's very underrated as a player," Rangers captain Chris Drury
said. "He's skilled and people are starting to realize how good
he is besides all the other stuff.

"Rather than booing us they're chanting 'Avery.' I'll take that
any game."

The Rangers had 14 straight failed power-play chances before
Avery broke the drought. Antropov's goal gave them two
man-advantage goals for the second time in six games after they
had gone 16 straight without doing it.

Gagne tied it for the Flyers 4:32 into the second period. Avery
got to a loose puck in front to make it 3-1 at 2:45 of the
third, and Sjostrom closed the scoring with 9:49 left